A North Dakota sailor who was killed during the Japanese attack on Pearl Harbor on Dec. 7, 1941, was laid to rest during an interment ceremony Oct. 25 at the National Memorial Cemetery of the Pacific ...
Gov. Kevin Stitt has announced that a new U.S. Navy submarine now under construction will be named the USS Oklahoma. "Not since the battleship USS Oklahoma, which was sunk by the Japanese when ...
Included in those losses were 429 crew members aboard the USS Oklahoma, which was struck by multiple torpedoes. From then to ...
Meanwhile, Shangri-La Resort’s 27 holes sits at No. 3 in Golfweek’s Best 2024 ranking of public-access courses in Oklahoma. The Battlefield debuts at No. 14 on Golfweek’s Best public-access ranking of ...
What You Need to Know: In the early 2000s, the USS Oklahoma City (SSN-723), a U.S. Navy Los Angeles-class nuclear-powered fast attack submarine, collided with the Norwegian tanker Norman Lady near ...
LOS ANGELES — No one knows where Everett Titterington was when the first torpedoes slammed into the USS Oklahoma on that infamous day in 1941. Was he thrown out of his bunk? Was he thrown to the ...
A total of 429 people died when the USS Oklahoma was attacked, but only 35 bodies were immediately identified. Now, the families of lost sailors have reason to hope This advertisement has not ...
Everett Titterington, a native of Milford, Iowa, who died aboard the USS Oklahoma during the Dec. 7, 1941, attack on Pearl Harbor, is memorialized with a burial at Riverside National Cemetery in ...
When I got through those years, I had a list of 70 local young men killed in WWII. The number was overwhelming to me, as Chico was a town of only 21,000. Many later appeared on my list of top ...
Even when there are not activities planned, people can honor veterans virtually any day throughout the year. Several small ...
Included in those losses were 429 crew members aboard the USS Oklahoma, which was struck by multiple torpedoes. From then to June 1944, Navy personnel recovered the remains of the fallen crew ...
No one knows where Everett Titterington was when the first torpedoes slammed into the USS Oklahoma on that infamous day in 1941. Was he thrown out of his bunk? Was he thrown to the deck?